300,000 North Koreans have fled to China risking their lives to flee the mass starvation and brutal oppression of the Stalinist North Korea Kim Jong regime.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

North Korea reveals nuclear plant and US says it's not concerned

US nuclear envoy Stephen Bosworth sought during his visit to Seoul to convince leaders that the US would act firmly to try to bring North Korea to terms.

The revelation of the project at the Yongbyon complex, revealed by US nuclear physicist Siegfried Hecker after a visit there, means that North Korea is nearing the stage at which it can produce enriched uranium for either electrical energy or warheads.

North Koreans told Mr. Hecker and Charles "Jack" Pritchard, a former US nuclear envoy who also visited the facility, that it was the lightwater kind, solely to produce energy, but analysts doubt that claim in view of North Korea's record of producing materiel for nuclear warheads with plutonium at their core at the same complex.

North Korea's evident success so far in the uranium project means that it will soon have a second reactor that's capable of making warheads quite rapidly once North Korean scientists and engineers have perfected the technology. They're believed to be using components acquired from outside the country despite UN sanctions imposed after the North's second underground nuclear test in May 2009.

The nuclear expert from Stanford who toured North Korea's Yongbyon nuclear facility with US nuclear physicist Siegfried Heckerv has described his shock at seeing the facility.

Robert Carlin, a former division chief at the U.S. State Department, told ABC News on Sunday, "We walked over to the window and we were suddenly surprised to see row after row after row of centrifuges. The North Koreans say it was 2,000."

He added, "I'm not kidding you, I think our minds went blank for a second because it was so stunning."

Carlin said it demonstrated to him "that the policy that we've been following seems to be at a dead end."